Wednesday, October 12, 2011

iCloud Leaves Beta

In advance of today’s iOS 5 release, the iCloud website has been updated, removing the “beta” modifier from the frontpage. Now comes the confusing part as everyone tries to register, and attempts to figure out which account to use if they had separate MobileMe and iPhone AppleIDs.

My experience was that it would let me login to the iCloud homepage using my normal AppleID with a gmail address, but I couldn’t enable it in any other applications. Maybe iOS 5 will rectify this situation. Most bizarrely it told me to find the iCloud preferences in System Preferences on my Mac, which simply don’t exist for me. I assume Mac OS 10.7.2 will be released soon to fix this.

[via MacRumors]


Find My Friends and AirPort Utility Both Released For iOS

iOS 5 is all set to launch today, and Apple has already released two of the new apps that are meant to accompany the service. Find My Friends and AirPort Utility are both in the App Store according to 9to5Mac (1,2) but unless you have iOS 5 — either the Gold Master or today’s later official release — you won’t be able to see or download either app.

Find My Friends is the vaguely invasive app that lets you see where your friends are located, assuming they’ve opened up their privacy settings wide enough to show it. Here’s the description:

Find My Friends allows you to easily location your friends and family from your iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch. Install this free app on your iOS 5 device and sign in with the Apple ID you use with iCloud. Adding a friend is easy – just send a request to see their location. Once your friend accepts using the Find My Friends app, you will then be able to see that friend’s location on a map. You can also choose to share your location for a limited period of time with a group of friends. Use Find My Friends to keep track of your traveling companions when you’re on a vacation. Or to see if the kids are home from school. Or to find the friends you’re meeting for dinner.

AirPort Utility unsurprisingly lets you setup, tweak and control your AirPort network from your iOS device, potentially saving you from breaking out your computer to reset the router or change the password or anything minor like that. Here’s the official description:

Use AirPort Utility to manage your Wi-Fi network and AirPort base stations, including AirPort Express, AirPort Extreme, and TimeCapsule – right from your iPad, iPhone, ir iPod touch. See a graphical overview of your Wi-Fi network and devices. Change base station and network settings, or manage advanced features such as security modes, wireless channels, and more. AirPort Utility works with all Apple 802.11n Wi-Fi base stations, including AirPort Express, AirPort Extreme, and Time Capsule.

iOS 5 Is Available Now

With over 200 new features, Apple’s iOS 5 is a must-have update. If you haven’t already, please check out our preparing to upgrade to iOS 5 and our iOS 5 Guide. If you need help or want to share your iOS 5 experiences, please visit our iPhone forums.

iOS 5 Guide

And the TiPb iPhone 4S giveaway goes to…!

And the TiPb iPhone 4S giveaway goes to...!

We said it, we meant it. We’re giving away an iPhone 4S, and it’s going to an member of the TiPb forums!

And that member is…!

We’ll contact you within 24 hrs to arrange delivery!

Congrats and thanks to everyone who participated and if you didn’t win this time — keep your browsers locked to TiPb because we have a ton more giveaways to come!

Warning: NSFW probably means not safe for Photo Stream

Miley Cyrus

You’re out of town and your special someone is back home so you decide to secretly snap some racy pictures of yourself and sext them on over. Meanwhile they’re just finishing showing off the new iPad or Apple TV to mom and dad, the screen saver or slide show kicks in, and your private pics just start Photo Streaming by…

And they can’t be deleted. Not until they’re automatically removed from your iOS devices after 30 days or 1000 photos, so you’re logging out of everything for a month or taking 1000 pictures of the floor or something to flush the stream… because otherwise you’re stuck.

While iOS 5, iCloud, and Photo Stream are awesome if you want to take a picture of your family at a party or your little ones during the game or some flowers or clothes you like or want to remember, that same “automagically everywhere” Camera Roll sync can easily — easily — turn around and bite you in the apps.

So if you’re going to take photos — or save them from Safari, Messages, Mail, etc — that are NSFW, you should probably consider them not safe for Photo Stream either.

Jump into Settings > iCloud and turn off Photo Stream while you have your fun, then delete them from your Camera Roll, then — when you’re ready to go back to family pics and landscapes — turn Camera Roll back on.

And if you work in Hollywood, this goes quadrupal for you!

iOS 5 Bugs: Disappearing Wi-Fi Personal Hotspot

iOS 5 Bugs: Disappearing Wi-Fi Personal Hotspot

So you just updated to iOS 5 and you find you have a problem — you go to use Wi-Fi Personal Hotspot feature and… it’s gone?! Don’t fret. Stop cursing. It’s happened with previous upgrades too. Truth is, It’s not really gone, it’s just hiding, and here are a couple things you can do to coax it back.

Look for it where it lives.

Once it re-activates, you should find it back where it was before, on the first page of Settings.

If that doesn’t work, it’s time to escalate reset the Settings.

Wait for your iPhone to restart, and if you still don’t see it, repeat Solution 1.

That’s a lot but that’s it. You should have your Personal Hotspot back up and running. If you’ve experienced this bug and used these solutions, let us know how they worked for you. If you tried something else that worked, let us know about that too!

For extra help, jump into our iOS 5 Forums

Apple Releases Mac OS X 10.7.2, Updates For Safari, AppleTV, More

 

iOS 5 is available, and now you can hammer Apple’s servers even more by downloading the boatload of other things that they’ve released simultaneously. Chief among them is Mac OS X 10.7.2, which has iCloud support baked in, allowing you to sync with iOS 5. It’s available over Software Update.

AppleTV has also scored an update to version 4.4.

Also newly updated? Safari and the iOS versions of iWork now have iCloud syncing support.

What say we all go and hammer Apple’s servers even more, and make it take longer to download any and everything? Sounds like a plan to me!

iOS 5 on Apple TV 2

Included in the plethora of updates today was also an update to the Apple TV 2. iOS 5 brings a number of new features including support for NHL GameCenter, WSJ Live, AirPlay Mirroring and Photo Stream from your iCloud account. Content from WSJ will begin today at 4pm. Highlights from previously played NHL games are available now.

Apple TV 2 iOS 5 update

WSJ on iOS 5

NHL on iOS 5

NHL on iOS 5

NHL games on Apple TV 2

Photo Stream on Apple TV 2

Did you win an iPhone 4S? Join us for iPhone Live tonight and find out!

Biggest. Apple. Day. Ever. And we’ll be talking all about it, from iOS 5 to iCloud, from triumphant tech to server suckage.

Oh, and we’ll be announcing the WINNER OF OUR iPHONE 4S GIVEAWAY!

Yeah. Be there.

(You can watch from iPhone via Ustream Viewer app (here’s how) and iPad (we recommend Duet Browser.)

Look for Mobile Nations in Ustream after 9pm EDT!

If you have any questions or stuff you want us to make sure we cover tweet them to @TiPb, email them to podcast@tipb.com, or leave them in the comments below!

Apple releases iTunes Movie Trailers for iPhone and iPad

Apple has added yet another app to their collection – iTunes Movie Trailers. As the name implies, this app is for watching movie previews and saving your favorites. iTunes Movie Trailers is iCloud enabled, so if you mark a favorite on your iPhone, you can watch it later on your iPad. It also supports AirPlay so that you can watch the trailers on your TV with Apple TV.

iTunes Movie Trailers puts the newest and most exclusive movie previews in HD in your hands. Browse trailers, clips, and featurettes for the biggest Hollywood blockbusters and independent cinema; view stunning HD photos; explore a year-long calendar of movie releases; find showtimes near you and get ticket info directly from your iPad or iPhone.

iTunes Movie Trailers is available on the iPhone and iPad for free.

[App Store link]

Have an app you’d love to see featured on TiPb? Email us at iosapps@tipb.com, tell us about your app (include an iTunes link), and we’ll take a look.

Apple’s new Cards app hits the App Store

Apple has released their new Cards app which allows you to create physical cards personalized with your photos and text and mail them right from your phone.

I just tried it out, and within minutes, I created a card with my daughter’s photo, added my own text, and ordered it to be shipped to my mom. I would like to see more card templates in the future, including some that are “just because”. However, you can change the text to any of the templates and make it your own.

When I first learned about cards, I was indifferent about it because I didn’t expect to use it much because I’m not the type of person who sends other people cards. However, now that sending a cards is so easy, and so personal, and so affordable. I think I’m going to start sending out more cards.

The new Cards app from Apple lets you create and mail beautifully crafted cards personalized with your own text and photos — right from your iPhone or iPod touch. Take a quick snapshot and with a few taps and swipes, an elegant thank you note or “wish-you-were-here” card is on its way to any address in the world.

Custom letterpress cards

Location integration

Prepaid postage included

Delivery notification

Card history

Cards is available on the iPhone for free. Individual cards cost $2.99 in the US and $4.99 everywhere else, including postage.

[App Store link]

Have an app you’d love to see featured on TiPb? Email us at iosapps@tipb.com, tell us about your app (include an iTunes link), and we’ll take a look.

Apple updates Pages, Numbers, and Keynote with iCloud support

One of the announced features of iCloud is the ability to keep all your files from Apple’s Pages, Numbers, and Keynote apps up to date. The update to those apps that bring this support is now available.

I am particularly excited about using Numbers with iCloud. I use Numbers on my iPad to record my students’ grades, but sometimes I forget to bring my iPad to class. It never fails that those are the days that a student notices that I made a mistake and needs a grade changed. Before iCloud, I would make a note in my notes app and make the change later. Now, I’ll just open the spreadsheet with Numbers on my iPhone, make the change, and it will be reflected on the spreadsheet on my iPad. Win.

You can create amazing documents and presentations on your iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch. And now with iCloud, you can keep your work up to date across all your iOS devices. You don’t have to save your work or transfer any files. Your documents — with all your latest edits — automatically appear everywhere.

Here are the update notes for all three apps.

Pages, Numbers, and Keynote are available on the iPhone and iPad for $9.99 each.

[Pages App Store link]
[Numbers App Store link]
[Keynote App Store link]

Have an app you’d love to see featured on TiPb? Email us at iosapps@tipb.com, tell us about your app (include an iTunes link), and we’ll take a look.

Cards and iTunes Movie Trailers Released, More iCloud Compatibility Updates

Apple has continued  their full push offensive on getting apps out today. Also coinciding with the release of iOS 5 is Cards, Apple’s new app for making, well, cards from your photographs. It’s explained thusly:

The new Cards app from Apple lets you create and mail beautifully crafted cards personalized with your own text and photos — right from your iPhone or iPod touch. Take a quick snapshot and with a few taps and swipes, an elegant thank you note or “wish-you-were-here” card is on its way to any address in the world. Choose from 21 designs and customize your card with a personal message and photo. Then select an address from your Contacts and place your order in seconds. All your cards are saved automatically, so it’s easy to send an invitation or birth announcement to more than one person.

Also new is iTunes Movie Trailers which will not only show you movie trailers, but also what’s showing near you, where and when. It looks like Fandango may have just been Sherlocked.

iTunes Movie Trailers puts the newest and most exclusive movie previews in HD in your hands. Browse trailers, clips, and featurettes for the biggest Hollywood blockbusters and independent cinema; view stunning HD photos; explore a year-long calendar of movie releases; find showtimes near you and get ticket info directly from your iPad or iPhone.

Apple has also updated Remote, iMovie and iPhoto, the latter of which is now syncs with iCloud thanks to Photo Stream.

Apple updates iOS 5 SDK beta for developers

Apple updates iOS 5 SDK beta for developers

Apple has had a number of updates pushed through the pipeline today, and the latest comes in the form of their iOS 5 SDK beta. The updated SDK (software development kit) allows developers to tap into features included in iOS 5 and future beta releases.

Developers working with the iOS 5 SDK beta have access to app integration with iCloud Storage, Newsstand Kit, Core Image, GLKit, Twitter, and new Game Center APIs. iOS Developer Program members can log in to download iOS 5 beta files and the new iOS 5 SDK beta from Apple’s iOS Dev Center.

If you notice anything specific just drop into our iOS Developer Forums and let us know!

Having Trouble Updating to iOS 5, You Are Not Alone

In addition to releasing iOS 5 today, Apple felt it necessary to also push Mac OS 10.7.2 along with other miscellaneous updates. The result of all the updates has taken it’s toll on Apple servers and users looking to update to iOS 5.

iOS 5 upgrade errors

Some errors are pointing to this Apple knowledgebase article. Our best advice is to hang tight and keep trying. Members in our iPhone forums are reporting a number of issues:

If you are experiencing these and other problems, you are not alone. It’s more than likely a result of Apple’s servers being hit hard from the massive number of users attempting to upgrade.

How about you? Smooth upgrade or not so smooth? We’d venture to guess you are in the latter group.

Apple’s servers hammered, iOS, other updates causing frustration

Netflix sobers up, cancels Qwikster spin-offs

Apple’s servers seem to be buckling under the ridiculous load of iOS and Mac users trying to download the massive amount updates released today — iOS 5, Cards, Find my Friends, Movie Trailers, AirPort Utility, iWork for iOS, Mac OS X 7.2, iPhoto, Aperture, iCloud for Windows, and the on, and on.

Readers are letting us know they’re getting download times stretching towards the seemingly infinite, “internal errors” like the dreaded 3200 destroying their download hopes and dreams, and various other things that make them want to pull their hair out and dance whatever’s the opposite of a snoopy dance. Worst are users trapped in some Schrodinger’s paradox — neither updated nor not, stuck in DFU or Restore mode hell.

It sucks. Literally. All the bandwidth out of the CDNs, the data centers, and likely the net itself. All we can say for now is take a break, catch you breadth, let the servers cool down a little and try again later. That or we can all pull over, get out, and offer to help them push?

Let us know how your updates are going, and if anything has helped, drop it in the comments below or jump over to our iOS 5 Forums and help us trouble shoot.

iOS 5 for iPhone, iPod touch, iPad now available

iOS 5 for iPhone, iPod touch, iPad

Apple has just released iOS 5 for iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad. Just plug into iTunes and check for updates. Arguably Apple’s most ambitious update ever, it includes iCloud integration as well as Notification Center, iMessage, AirPlay Mirroring, and a host of new features.

If you’re updating now, let us know how it’s going for you, and if you need help, here are your go-to link.

Initial iOS 5 Thoughts

Well the day is finally here, iOS 5 is live and ready to be downloaded.  After being announced back in June, four long months ago, it’s finally available.

My initials reaction to it a little bit of “woopty doo” so this is it?  But now that I’ve really investigated all of the built-in apps, I do notice a bunch of the changes they’ve been talking about.  I haven’t figured out all 200 yet, but I’m getting there.

My biggest advice is to copy and paste the information that pops up when you click to download the software.  Nine times out of ten, I never read any of these information blurbs but this time it has helped me see more of what iOS 5 has to offer.

Here’s what I have discovered so far:

Notifications: Probably the most well known update in iOS but now instead of a box coming across the middle of the screen saying you have a text message, a small banner comes across the top of the screen for about 10 seconds.  It doesn’t affect anything you are doing whether it be Facebook, Twitter or reading an email.  When you are ready, you can go to that specific app or swipe the screen from top to bottom to get to the notification center.  You can decide what you want in your notification center and in what order in the notifications part of the settings.

Twitter: In case I didn’t tweet enough to begin with, Apple has now made it even easier.  You can tweet directly from Camera, Photos, Maps, Safari and YouTube.  When you click on the button on the bottom left corner of a picture, it pulls up the list where you can email, message, assign to contact, etc. and now Tweet has been added.

Camera: Aside from the ease of tweeting pictures, Apple has added more to the camera app.  You can get to the camera directly from the lock screen by double-clicking the home button and clicking the camera.  The volume up button now allows you to take a picture.  You can even make small edits to a picture once you have taken it: crop and rotate, red eye removal and one-tap enhancements.

Mail: Now you can format text in emails: bold, italicize, and style="text-decoration: underline;">underline.  Another addition to typing, which you can do in notes or messaging too, is the dictionary feature.  Once you select a word, a button pops up that allows you to look up the definition.

Maps: Now when you look for directions, the maps app will give you multiple routes.  You can also print out the directions now.

I haven’t had a chance to investigate iCloud yet but these are some of the new features that I have discovered in the few hours I’ve had the update.

Let me know what you guys think!

TiPb Asks: Are your TV and movie apps working with iOS 5 AirPlay Mirroring?

TiPb Asks: Are your TV and movie apps working with iOS 5 AirPlay Mirroring?

While we haven’t had time to test all of them, but off the bat we’re getting mixed results with AirPlay Mirroring of iPad 2 TV and movie apps. CityTV wouldn’t work — it cited contractual obligations. CTV did work and so did Global. Crackle was buggy. We’re trying more now.

Some TV and movie apps use Apple’s built in media controls so AirPlay works automagically. Others… have opted out. We were kind of hoping iOS 5 AirPlay Mirroring would let us work around it. Maybe it will. Or maybe Hollywood will update to shut it out of more apps. We shall see.

Have you tried out your favorite iPad 2 TV or movie app on Apple TV yet? Did it work?

iCloud Control Panel for Windows now available

Apple has released its iCloud Control Panel app for Microsoft Windows computers. The iCloud Control Panel is required to enable iCloud on your Windows PC and provides access to Photo Stream, Contacts, Calendars Bookmarks and Mail.

It is quite a large download, coming in at just under 40MB.

Source: Apple

Apple TV iOS 5 update now available with NHL, WSJ

Apple TV iOS 5 update now available with NHL, WSJ

Want to use your Apple TV 2 with fancy new iOS 5 features like Photo Stream and AirPlay Mirroring? Well go navigate over to Software Update and start your download because it’s available now.

Other new features include (at least in Canada):

To find out more about these features, and to get help:

Apple releases iPhoto 9.2, Aperture 3.2 with Photo Stream support

Apple releases iPhoto 9.2, Aperture 3.2 with Photo Stream support

Again, for iOS 5 users who also use Mac OS X, Apple is providing updates to enable iCloud on the desktop, with Photo Stream now up and running in iPhoto 9.2 and Aperture 3.2.

Hit Software Update if you got them the old fashioned way, or head on over to the Mac App Store if you’re all new and fancy.

And then come back and let us know how they work for you!

Mac OS X Lion 7.2 with iCloud support now available

Mac OS X Lion 7.2 now available

To coincide with iOS 5, Apple today has released Mac OS X Lion 7.2 which plugs Apple’s desktop OS into the same iCloud that just started powering mobile. If you’re an iOS user with Mac, grab this now.

If you’re an iOS user with Windows, hang tight. Your update should be out soon as well!

The 10.7.2 update is recommended for all OS X Lion users and includes general operating system fixes that improve the stability, compatibility, and security of your Mac. It also includes support for iCloud, a breakthrough set of free cloud services that automatically and wirelessly store your content on iCloud and push it to all of your devices. iCloud on OS X Lion includes the following features:

Getting started with iCloud is easy. After installing the update, OS X will automatically present an iCloud setup panel. Simply enter an existing Apple ID or create a new one and then follow the on screen instructions. To learn more about iCloud visit http://www.apple.com/icloud.

The 10.7.2 update also includes Safari 5.1.1 as well as fixes that:

For detailed information about Safari 5.1.1, please visit this website: http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4922.

For detailed information on this update, please visit this website: http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4767.

For information on the security content of this update, please visit: http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1222.

If you’re downloading now, let us know how it goes for you, and when you get iCloud up and running, tell us how it works.

Apple TV iOS 5 update now available

Apple TV iOS 5 update now available

Want to use your Apple TV 2 with fancy new iOS 5 features like Photo Stream and AirPlay Mirroring? Well go navigate over to Software Update and start your download because it’s available now.

To find out more about these features, and to get help:

Real Racing 2 brings Party Play

Real Racing 2 and Real Racing 2 HD have been updated to support their newly announced feature, Party Play. With Party Play, up to 4 players can play in a split screen on your HD TV. The only catch is that at least one player must be using an iPhone 4S or iPad 2.

I’ve said it once, and I’ll say it again – I’m very excited to try this out!

Party Play takes AirPlay to the next level of iOS gaming, facilitating wireless local multiplayer for up to 4 players simultaneously in a split screen display output to your HD TV using an iPad 2 or iPhone 4S as the host. Play in the comfort of your own home and experience the joy of championship racing with iOS 5.

Here’s a list of all the updated features:

Real Racing 2 is available on the iPhone for $4.99 and the iPad for $6.99.

[Real Racing 2 App Store link] [Real Racing 2 HD App Store link]

Have an app you’d love to see featured on TiPb? Email us at iosapps@tipb.com, tell us about your app (include an iTunes link), and we’ll take a look.

Bring your Instagram photos to Facebook with Facebook Photo Importer

Facebook Photo Importer is an app that lets you import your photos from Picasa (Google+), Instagram, Flickr, and Photobucket to Facebook. It’s fast, easy, and doesn’t use up your data because you’re not uploading the photos from your device.

Facebook Photo Importer lets you import 100 photos in less than a minute,
straight to your Facebook profile from Picasa (Google+), Instagram, Flickr and Photobucket.

Facebook Photo Importer is available on the iPhone for $1.99.

[App Store link]

Have an app you’d love to see featured on TiPb? Email us at iosapps@tipb.com, tell us about your app (include an iTunes link), and we’ll take a look.

Guide To Using New Features in iOS 5

Apple has included over 200 new features in iOS. A good number of those are fly beneath the radar type updates, so let’s focus on the key updates you’ll find with iOS 5 and how you can make the most of them right away. If you haven’t installed iOS 5 just yet, be sure to check out our article on how to prepare your iOS device for iOS 5.

Notifications

Probably the biggest and most noticeable change in iOS 5 has been to Notifications.

Let’s say you receive a new text message or notification from Twitter. Your iPhone will stack the notifications neatly on your lock screen. If you swipe your finger across the notification, it will bring directly to the location within the app that correlates to the notification. Just receive a text message from Susie, swipe right and you’ll be able to start typing your reply in jiffy.

Notifications in iOS 5

If you swipe to unlock, then you’ll notice these notifications disappear. Fear not. Your iPhone will keep all of your notifications in the new Notifications Center. Simply swipe down to reveal all of your notifications. You can delete notifications by group, but not individually. For example, selecting the ‘X’ at the top right will delete all Tweetbot notifications. It’s not possible to delete just one notification.

Notifications center iOS 5

The thing I’ve noticed from using Notifications is that the Notification Center can get crowded. If you navigate to Settings > Notifications, you have options to turn notifications on/off. There is also the option to sort manually based on your personal preference or by time received.

Notifications center sort

iMessage

If you are familiar with BlackBerry Messenger, affectionately known as BBM among BlackBerry fans (are there any left), then you’ll find iMessage to be very familiar. iMessage allows you to send messages through WiFi and 3G connections to other iOS users. Essentially, iMessage is an improved SMS/MMS, but without going through your wireless carrier. If all of your friends only own iPhones and iPads, then you might as well cancel your text messaging plan. We jest, but iMessage can seriously save you some money if used as a text messaging replacement. Wireless companies cannot be happy about this one, so score one for the text happy iPhone consumer.

Other perks of using iMessage are return receipts and you can even see when someone is typing a message to you. This makes iMessage have a more conversational feel than standard SMS. Plus, it’s free and won’t count towards your text message plan.

iMessage will use data, so you still have to monitor your data usage if you are not on an unlimited data plan.

Camera and Photos

Apple has finally relented and allowed us to use the volume-up button to take pictures. From the lock screen, you’ll find a new handy camera icon making it easier to access your camera and take photos.

The Photos application also gets a much needed and useful update, which will allow you to edit photos directly on your phone. Simply tap the ‘Edit’ button at the top right of your photo when within Camera Roll. It will reveal four options below your photo.

iOS 5 Photo options

Tap a photo and press Edit. It will reveal four options:

When finished, you can save your newly updated image. Along with previously available methods of sharing comes a new option to ‘Tweet’ your photo, thanks to the new deep level Twitter integration will touch on later in the article.

Reminders App

The new Reminders application is an intelligent to-do list, with features that allow notifications based upon your location. For example, let’s say you need a reminder to ‘take out the garbage’. You can set the reminder alert to alert you when you arrive a specified location. In this case, when you arrive ‘home’, your iPhone will alert you that it’s time to take out the garbage.

Reminders app iOS 5

With iCloud, reminders will sync throughout all of your devices. Make a change to one and it’ll automatically update throughout your family of iOS devices.

The Reminders app also works hand-in-hand with the new Siri feature available on the iPhone 4S. “Siri, set up an appointment with Tim Cook at 5 o’clock“.

Reducing Clutter With Safari Reader, Reading List

Safari Reader takes the clutter away when reading articles on the Internet. Now it doesn’t matter if an website is iPhone optimized or not. Simply browse to an article and you’ll see a READER badge pop-up in the browser address window. Press that button and you’ll be greeted with a beautiful ad-free, perfectly formatted view of the article. Our site has a nicely formatted iPhone version of the site, but Reader’s version blows it out of the water. I know which one I’d rather read.

iOS 5 Reader

 

If you’d like to save articles for a later date, you can add them to a Reading List by tapping the arrow icon at the bottom of your window and select ‘Reading List’. At any time, you can select Bookmarks > Reading List to view unread articles.

Newstand

If you subscribe to magazines or newspapers with your iPhone or iPad, then Newstand will neatly organize them into a virtual bookshelf for you. Essentially, this is an iBooks styled folder that will continuously update based on your subscriptions. This feature is high on style points, especially if you have a good number of subscriptions. This new feature is particularly useful if you own an iPad.

Deep Level Twitter Integration

The new deep level Twitter integration provides new ways to send tweets, directly through a number of familiar iOS apps like YouTube, Safari, Camera and Maps.

All you need to do is set up your account within Settings > Twitter. In my case, iOS magically knew my account information, presumably from the countless Twitter apps on my iPhone that have access to that information. Then again, maybe they simply matched my email address to what was on file with Twitter.

Also new in Contacts is the addition of Twitter account profile field. When tweeting using iOS 5, it will auto-complete @usernames based upon your updated contacts. Apple has worked directly with Twitter to offer a seamless way to receive updated contact information on your iPhone.

Twitter update contacts

Within Settings > Twitter, select the option to Update Contacts. Your iPhone will rummage through the email addresses and phone numbers in your address book, looking to match them with an associated Twitter account. Once it finds a match, it will update the profile image and Twitter user ID.

PC Free

While this doesn’t apply to your current devices, you’ll be pleased to know that you can activate an iPhone, iPad or iPod touch without connecting to iTunes. It still makes perfect sense to connect to iTunes at some point, so that you can download music, movies and more – not to mention that’s always a good idea to have regular backups of your data. Regardless, this is great news. You can crack the plastic on an iOS device and get it activated without the dreaded wired connection. No longer will families have to crowd around their computers to activate their shiny new iPhones, iPads and iPod touch devices this and future holiday seasons.

WiFi Sync

While you may not hear much about this little gem, it’s the best thing since sliced bread. Simply connect your iOS device to a power source and it will wirelessly sync your data to your Mac or PC. You must be connected to the same WiFi network, but no longer do you have to tether your iOS device to your computer to back up your stuff. Plug-in and let iOS sync your iPhone for you. To set up iTunes Wi-Fi Sync, simply navigate to Settings > General > iTunes Wi-Fi Sync.

iTunes WiFi sync

Assorted Notable Changes in iOS 5

These features are just the tip of the iceberg. With over 200 new features, you are bound to find a number of great new features that help improve your overall experience with iOS. Please make use of the comments section to let us know your favorite iOS 5 features, whether it’s one we’ve outlined or not.

Need help? Visit our iPhone and iPad forums, the world’s first iPhone community, featuring over 125,000 members. Registration is free an our forums are also ad-free for members and includes a free companion app available in the App Store. It’s literally the best place you can find help with iOS 5 and your iOS device.

Enjoy iOS 5.

iOS 5 for iPhone and iPad walkthrough

iOS 5 for iPhone and iPad walkthrough

iOS 5 is perhaps Apple’s most audacious update since iOS 2, which introduced nothing less than the App Store and MobileMe. The features are almost an embarrassment of riches, including unobtrusive Notifications, the carrier-consternating iMessage, Twitter integration, a location aware Reminders app, and an entirely new UI paradigm in the artificially intelligent Siri voice control system for iPhone 4S.

And for the first time what’s happening on the outside is just as compelling — iCloud. Apple called it “cutting the cord”, severing the post-PC from the PC, and the iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad from their subservience to Mac and Windows.

But is it truly transformation or just another bold yet ultimately evolutionary step forward? Let’s find out.

Note: This walkthrough is based on the iOS 5 gold master (GM). While I don’t expect any changes in the release version, I’ll update if any do show up. So, please consider this a living, breathing document for now, and expect additional screen shots, comments, and corrections going forward.

iOS 5 adds new features to almost every existing app on the iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad, and introduces new apps as well. Still, iOS 5 is built on the foundation of what came before, so for previously introduced functionality, please see our previous walkthroughs.

iOS 5 includes new system-wide features like Siri for iPhone 4S, PC free, Notification Center, AirPlay Mirroring, and Twitter integration, new apps like Reminders and Newsstand, and tons of new features for existing apps like iMessage, photo editing, Reader and Reading List, and much, much more.

Apple’s video above gives a good overview and I’m going to go over everything on an app-by-app, feature-by-feature basis below. But like I said at the beginning, this year iOS is only half the story…

iCloud replaces MobileMe and iWork.com, and groups together functionality previously included in the iTunes, iBooks, and App Stores. It also does setup, backup, and restore, and a host of other things.

Unlike MobileMe, Apple has carefully avoided calling iCloud a sync service. Instead, they say it wirelessly stores your content on the server and then pushes it back down to all your devices. This probably better frames the relationship between cloud and devices. There’s no single master copy of “truth” on the server, but coequal copies on every device, and on iCloud.com (which Apple notes is ad free. Zing). And just like with iOS, there’s no end-user exposed file system. Your data no longer exists in folders like it did on iDisk. It exists in apps.

Everyone gets 5GB of iCloud storage for free, and iTunes, iBooks, and App Store purchases aren’t counted against that, nor are Photo Stream images. Mail, documents, accounts, settings, app data, Camera Roll, etc. do count, however. In case they count far more than your free 5GB allow, you can purchase more storage.

When apps like Apple’s own iWork suite, Numbers, Pages, and Keynote save copies of your files, those documents are stored on iCloud and pushed out to all your iOS, Mac, and Windows PC devices. Apple has made the same functionality available to 3rd party developers as well, so it’s likely many if not most apps that can create and edit files will soon tie into Documents in the Cloud.

(Hopefully games will as well. Starting Angry Birds on iPhone and having to start over to play on iPad or Mac needs to be a thing of the past.)

It’s not a Dropbox killer, or a name-your-favorite-sync-service-with-APIs killer of any kind. I can keep my home directory in Dropbox and use it like I use a filesystem, with the advantages of versioning and sync. iCloud doesn’t — and doesn’t want — to do any of that.

However, some apps that previously used Dropbox merely to sync documents may add iCloud as well or instead because it’s built in, and I’m fine with that. It frees Dropbox up to be my file system.

Find my iPhone has been folded into iCloud, and joining it is Find my Friends, a Google Latitude-like social location sharing service that takes pains to point out its better privacy and security. Like Find my iPhone, Find my Friends isn’t built into iOS, but is available for free in the App Store.

When you install it you’ll be asked to allow it to use Location. It’s pretty much useless without it. From the All tab you can see All your Friends and a list of specific friends and their current distance from you. Tap a friend to see their Info. Since it’s integrated with Contacts, if you already have their details you’ll see it here. If not, you’ll be able to add them. Tap through to see their location on an embedded Map. You can even curl up the page to get the basic Map-style options. Tap All Your Friends and see the world light up.

If you don’t have any friends yet, you’ll be given the opportunity to invite some. Tap the Edit button on the top left to remove friends.

Under the Temporary tab you get a separate set of more constrained friends. These friends can have location sharing enabled for an hour, a day, a week — whatever you decide. For example, your spouse or children might have permanent location sharing. A group of friends trying to find each other at a cafe might only have a couple hours of sharing.

The Me tab lets you see your own profile. Tap on your current location to see it on a map. Toggle Hide from Followers to go off grid for a while. You can also see a list of your followers and tap through to their Info.

Tap Account to sign in or out, choose from which Apple ID to send notifications, toggle Friend Request on or off, and tap through to get help.

The Requests tab lists friends who have invited you. Accepting shares your location with them. Inviting them back shares their location with you.

Perhaps the single most profound change in iOS 5 is Apple’s cutting of the iTunes cord. Never again will a Mac or Windows PC be required to activate, setup, or update a new iPhone, iPod touch, or iPad (though you can still choose to do so if you wish.) From now on, you can activate, setup, and update directly on your device over the internet.

Other aspects of PC Free are more subtle but just as welcome, such as the ability to create photo albums and mail folders on-device. We’ll cover those in the appropriate app sections; here’s the big stuff.

When you turn on your new device, you’ll now be presented with a screen that says iPhone, iPad touch, or iPad (depending on which device you’re setting up). Just swipe to unlock and you’re welcomed and invited to choose your preferred language. The most common language options will be immediately available but you can tap the down arrow to see others. Hit the Next button to pick. Apple will also provide you a default Country or Region based on where you bought your device, but you can tap Show More to expand the choices.

Interestingly, neither here nor in any later step are default choices pre-checked for you. You can’t simply keep hitting Next to speed through. You have to look at the choices and tap one to check it before the Next button will even activate. Apple is forcing you to pay more attention than is often required on the web or in apps.

Next you’re given a choice to globally enable or disable Location Services. Location Services use GPS, cell-tower triangulation, and Wi-Fi router mapping to determine the approximate location of your device. This feature is used for turn-by-turn navigation (like TomTom), check-in games (like FourSquare), social networks (like Facebook), geo-tagging (like in the Camera app), and utilities (like Siri and Find my iPhone), etc. Unless you have a particular need to globally disable it, you probably want to turn on the Location Services feature at this point. You can change your mind or selectively disable or enable these services later on in the Settings app (e.g., turn off your Camera app’s geo-tagging, but leave on TomTom’s turn-by-turn navigation).

You’ll need to connect to a Wi-Fi network to continue iCloud setup (if none is available, you’ll have to switch to iTunes setup instead.) Your iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch will then connect to Apple’s servers to activate (the cord was cut from iTunes, not from Apple).

You have the choice to

To set up your iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch as a new device, sign in with your Apple ID (or tap through to create one). If you have multiple Apple IDs, for example a MobileMe ID, an iTunes ID, an ID associated with FaceTime or something else, you’ll have to choose which one you want to use. If you change your mind, you can login with a different ID later (and you can also login to different apps, like iTunes and iMessage, with separate IDs later). Agree to Apple’s Terms and Conditions and Apple will setup your ID and ask if you want to use iCloud or not. If you do — and most people should because it’s 1) free for the base level service, and 2) highly functional — you’ll be asked to enable iCloud Backup — and again, most people should. (It will create daily backups when you’re connected to Wi-Fi.)

Decide whether or not you want to enable Find my iPhone to help trace lost or stolen devices, and then choose if you want to share diagnostic information with Apple to help them improve the iOS experience.

And you’re done.

You can also choose to restore based on a previous iCloud Backup. You’ll be asked to sign in with your Apple ID. Make sure it’s the same Apple/iCloud ID that you used to make your previous backups. Agree to the Terms and Conditions and you’ll be given a list of recent backups to choose from, including those of all iOS devices backed up to iCloud.

Pick your backup and iCloud will begin the restore. Then your iPhone, iPod touch, or iPad will restart, all your settings nicely back where you left them, and iTunes will begin to re-download all the apps you had installed when the backup was made. If you live in countries where iTunes in the Cloud is available, iTunes will also re-download all the iTunes music, TV shows, and iBooks that were previously on your device. (You need to stay on Wi-Fi for large files to re-download.)

For security reasons, iOS may also prompt you to set a Passcode Lock, and not wait for you to go find it in Settings on your own.

Gone are the days when, after Apple released a software update, you had to rush back to your iTunes-equipped Windows or Mac PC, download a 500MB+ firmware file, backup your data, install the new OS version, and restore you data back to your device. You can now do all that, better and faster, right on your iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad.

When a Software Update is available, you’ll get a notification popup. The Settings app will also get badged, just like Mail. To get your update, go to Settings, tap on General, tap on Software Updates, and if it isn’t there waiting for you, tap on Check for Updates. When you see the update, tap Install.

The firmware will download and then your iPhone, iPod touch, or iPad will restart and update.

Apple is now doing bit-differential, or delta file updates. That means only the bits that have changed need to be downloaded, not the entire firmware anymore. The update also happens in place, so you don’t need to backup and restore your data. Much more efficient and hence much faster.

iOS 5 beta 4 is an OTA update... if you can connectDaily Tip: How to do an iOS OTA update [developers]

If you do still want to sync with your home iTunes library but don’t want to have to tether to your Windows or Mac PC over USB, you now have the option to sync over Wi-Fi as well. Wi-Fi sync needs to be enabled in the Settings app, and you need to sync with iTunes over USB at least once to set it up, and you need to be plugged into power throughout, but if none of that dissuades you, Zune-like Wi-Fi sync is finally yours.

If you do choose to keep syncing with iTunes over USB, or you sync occasionally over USB to move large files over, like movies, you can now continue to use your iPhone, iPod touch, or iPad while syncing. (Previously unlocking your device would cancel the sync.)

Back in iOS 4.3 Apple introduced Multitasking Gestures as a beta feature for developers to test. In iOS 5 they’re back and they’re for everyone. They include 4 or 5 finger multitouch navigation gestures that complement rather than replace the Home Button functions. They do, however, reduce the amount of times you need to single or double click Home, which could reduce concerns of hardware wear and tear post iOS 4 multitasking.

The new gestures can be done with 4 or 5 fingers and resemble multitouch trackpad gestures available on Mac OS X since the introduction of the original MacBook Air in 2008 and expanded upon in the recent Mac OS X 10.7 Lion gestures. They currently include

The sideways swipe is interesting in that it allows you to go left or right whereas the Fast App Switcher reorders the recent app icons so you always go backwards in “time” to the right. It seems perceptively faster for a single app-back movement since there’s no carousel animation, yet you can only swipe back one app at a time whereas you can tap on any of 4 immediately available app icons in the Fast App Switcher and swipe back 4 additional apps at a time.

Siri is a natural language interface for iOS that combines powerful voice recognition (rumored to be powered by industry leader Nuance) and synthesized speech with a contest-aware, artificially intelligent query and response engine that’s designed to become your “virtual assistant”. It replaces the previous Voice Control feature introduced with iOS 3 on the iPhone 3GS and is initiated the same way — a long press and hold of the Home Button.

Siri launches as a beta and supports English (U.S., UK, and Australian), French, German. Apple urges users to talk to Siri the way they would another person, and to ask similar types of questions:

Siri will listen to and parse these and other questions, launch applications like Mail or Messages, search internet services like Yelp and Wolfram Alpha, and check the weather or stocks. It will then synthesize and speak a response, and if you ask a follow up question, it will remember the context and understand the next query and issue the follow up response accordingly. Here’s some of what Siri can do:

[I'll replace Apple's art with real screenshots when iPhone 4S ships and we get the chance to put it through its paces.]

More impressively, it can combine these functions to read a message requesting a dinner date, search for a restaurant, get directions, send back a confirmation message, and add an appointment for the dinner, all as part of an interactive confirmation.

At least in theory. It remains to be seen how reliable and resilient it will prove when millions of new iPhone 4S users start pounding on it. Whether it’s the best new feature in iOS 5 and the future of user input, or just the best new feature no one will use for input remains to be seen.

Equally interesting is what it portents for Apple. Just like the App Store began the intermediation and exclusion of Google by offering users a better experience interacting with data in apps than via a web search, Siri continues it by theoretically making it easier and more enjoyable to engage in query/response with Siri than with Google. Customer Insight is a hot industry topic for a reason — if done well it lets you increase revenue per user, turn users into products you can sell to advertisers, and even turn suppliers into customers of their own, and complementary and competing companies’ data.

In typical fashion, Apple isn’t building a search engine to compete with Google, they’re building something to obsolete the current conception of search engines. And they’re not doing it by becoming a walled garden — there’s no profit in that. They’re doing it by becoming a walled gate with a multi-directional toll system.

Note: Apple says additional language and feature support will be coming to Siri in the future.

In addition to Siri’s query/response engine, it also includes speech-to-text functionality. This manifests as a microphone key to the left of the space bar that, when tapped, brings up an speech input interface. Talk, tap Done, and Apple will parse what you said on their servers and return text to built in apps like Mail or Messages, or any App Store app that supports keyboard entry, including Facebook, Keynote, etc.

iOS 5 brings non-interruptive, less intrusive notification alerts to iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch. Similar to how Android’s notification tray works, or the basic functionality of the LockInfo Jailbreak app, it’s perhaps not quite as elegant as webOS’ system but it’s a huge leap forward from iOS’ previous implementation.

Notifications are presented in one of three different ways:

All of the implementations show an icon of the app issuing the alert to the left and a brief except of the alert content to the right, but work in slightly different ways.

Lock Screen Info is the most complex of the three. When an alert comes in, your iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch wakes briefly from sleep to show you the notification.

Touching and dragging the icon unlocks the device and sends you to the app to view the information. Unlocking the device clears all past notifications from Lock Screen info.

When your iPhone, iPod touch, or iPad is unlocked, Notification Center can be revealed by swiping downwards from the status bar. It can be dismissed by swiping back up from the small gripper icon at the button of the screen.

Notification Center proper brings widgets of a sort to iPhone and iPod touch, though currently only Apple’s own Weather and Stocks app. Weather shows the current local or default temperature, hi and low, and precipitation if any. Stocks show a horizontally scrolling ticker showing recent quotes and the delta changes for all your stocks. Tapping on either one takes you to the full app.

Just like iPad has no Weather or Stocks apps, it has no widgets in Notification Center.

Beneath the widgets is the notification list. Each list is headed by the appropriate app icon and name to the left, and a far-too-tiny X icon to the right. Tapping the X icon clears all notifications for that app. Tapping anywhere on the alert will take you to the app to view the information. You can control which apps and how many notifications per app are displayed in Settings.

This is lightyears beyond where we were before, and it raises intriguing possibilities for the future. Developer access to the widget system, media controls in Notification Center as opposed to the Fast App Switcher, radio controls for fast Wi-Fi and Bluetooth enabling/disabling like SBSettings perhaps? Apple values simplicity, but they’re not afraid of adding layers of sophistication.

Notification Banners appear appear briefly at the top of the screen whenever your device is unlocked, and are animated with a roll down, roll back up effect. Tapping a Notification Banner sends you to the app that issued the alert and shows you the information. While far less intrusive than the old-style popup notifications, the Banners can still obscure information and cover buttons, and when they popup unexpectedly can cause you to accidentally tap them rather then the top bar button you’d begun to tap. Hopefully as Apple matures the notification system and developers update their apps to support iOS 5, the issue will diminish.

Note: Some apps will still default to old style popups to really get your attention, like Clock alarms and Calendar appointment alerts. You can manually assign your preference on an app-by-app basis in Settings.

Again, far better than what came before, yet room for more to come. For example, the ability to tap and instantly reply to Messages without having to leave the current app — like BiteSMS?

iOS 5 also adds new accessibility features that allow the camera’s LED flash to be used to signal notifications. Vibration patterns, including custom vibration patterns, can also be assigned and created to better identify incoming notifications, such as phone calls. These features are accessible in the Settings app.

Twitter, the 160-character social network, has been integrated into iOS 5 at the system level. This means that everywhere you could previous Share content via Mail or Messages, you can also now choose to Share by way of a Tweet. Rather than handing you off to the official Twitter app, however, just like Mail and Messages are embedded views, so are the new tweet sheets. Just fill them out, choose if you want to add your location, and tweet away.

AirPlay was introduced with iOS 4.2 and allowed any video using Apple’s standard media control to beam image and sound over a local Wi-Fi network to an Apple TV for viewing on the big screen. It was… limited in its initial release but iOS 4.3 brought increased support for Apple’s Photo app and added support for 3rd party apps, and in general made it a solid, enjoyable feature. (Especially with on-the-fly transcoders like Air Video)

With iOS 5, Apple brings AirPlay Mirroring to iPad 2 and iPhone 4S. AirPlay mirroring lets iOS share it’s screen, any screen of any app, to the Apple TV over Wi-Fi.

iPhone 4S and iOS 5 brings AirPlay mirroring to the iPhone. Because Apple decided against adding a dual core Apple A5 chipset to the 2011 iPod touch, that’s now the only device left out in the cold when it comes to mirroring.

While on the surface AirPlay mirroring might not seem like a major feature, it allows the personal, intimate experiences of everything from gaming to FaceTime to become social, group activities, and allows videos and presentations to be shared by the whole family or entire meeting.

A keynote presentation projected in the boardroom, or a group of friends playing a big screen boardgames are just some of the obvious uses. As companies like Firemint continue to push the envelope with concepts like multiple-device-to-Apple-TV Party Play — where iPhone 4S and iPad become controllers for group gaming, an a serious threat to traditional consoles in the casual space.

To activate AirPlay Mirroring, start the app you want to mirror, double tap the Home Button to bring up the Fast App Switcher, swipe across the media controls, tap the Air Play button, and select Apple TV as the source.

iOS 5 features: AirPlay Mirroring for FaceTime

Previously embedded only in Apple’s iBooks, with iOS 5 the entire system has access to a built in dictionary. Unfortunately, I’m lead to believe developers don’t have access to it yet for App Store apps, but hopefully that will change in the future.

With iOS 5, iPad gains the ability to not only undock the keyboard and slide it up and down, but to split it apart into two half-keyboards for easier thumb-typing. Just touch and hold the Keyboard button at the bottom right of the keyboard to popup the dock/undock and split/merge menu, or just touch it at both sides and pull it apart or put it back together again. (Yes, it’s very cathartic.)

iphone_30_icon_home_screenCompared to iOS 4′s Fast App Switcher and Folders, iOS 5 changes either transcend just the Home Screen (Notification Center’s Lock Screen info) or blur the boundaries between Home Screen and app (Newstand). Still, there are a few additions that can probably be safely categorized under Home Screen.

Instead of Apps being installed one by one, multiple apps can now be downloaded and installed simultaneously.

iOS’ already industry leading accessibility has been augmented with a gesture based control panel called AssistiveTouch that can reproduce all the functionality of the existing hardware buttons, and much more.

Once turned on in Settings, the control panel can be activated by tapping the overlay on screen. It pops up with a menu containing Gestures, Favorites, Devices, and Home. Gestures has a sub menu for 2, 3, 4, and 5 finger gestures, and once you choose a quantity, blue circles in the appropriate amount appear on screen. Favorites contains defaults like Pinch and Swipe, and any custom gestures you’ve created. Device replicates the hardware features such as Rotate Screen, Lock Screen, Mute/Unmute, Volume Up/Volume Up, and Shake.

While some may think this heralds Apple ditching hardware buttons, remember, you would still need a way to reset your device if it locks up, to turn off the ringer or change volume if it’s in your pocket or purse, and to keep iOS accessible for children and people form whom the Home Button is easy and complex UI and gestures are a barrier to entry.

Still, this could turn out to be a very interesting addition to iOS 5, especially for advanced users who want to have a software-based interface. Most importantly, it shows that Apple — who is already incredibly far ahead of the competition when it comes to accessibility — is not slowing down.

iphone_30_icon_messagesThe biggest change to Messages is one that’s as almost invisible as it is profound. Messages began as SMS, an in the beginning only offered text message functionality. In iOS 3 internationally and iOS 4 in the US, Apple renamed is Messages and added MMS functionality. Now, in iOS 5, Apple has replicated the carriers’ traditional cash cow by providing a method to send text and multimedia via iMessages — securely encrypted — over the Wi-Fi and cellular data networks.

Messages neatly handles both traditional SMS/MMS messages and iMessages, with iMessages integrated so seamlessly that only the color and faded text — green for traditional SMS/MMS and blue for iMessages betray which is in use at any given time.

There is one large limitation to iMessages, however, and for some users it might be a deal-breaker — it only works between iOS devices. That hasn’t stopped BlackBerry’s BBM from become a platform-locking success, but BBM has been around much longer and offers far, far more functionality.

That’s not to say it doesn’t have some BBM-like functionality. You can see delivery status and, if enabled in Settings, read receipts as well. You can see, via ellipses, when someone is in the midst of responding. Also, for users with limited text plans, especially expensive international text plans, and lots of friends on iOS, iMessage will be welcome.

Like FaceTime before it, iMessages uses an Apple ID-registered email address as a method of identification. This also means, like FaceTime before it, iMessages is available to iPad and iPod touch users. Yes, they get the iOS Messages app for the first time. Due to the data-centric rather than telephony-centric method of transmission, they can now send and receive iMessages from other iOS users when and where they never could — and still can’t — SMS or MMS.

The interface conventions are a little different. iPhone has a single pane view, for example, so hitting the edit button in the contact list view lets you delete whole conversations and in the conversation view allows you to delete or forward individual messages (bubbles). On iPad, both contact list and conversations are visible at the same time so the edit button handles conversations and individual message managements is switched over, strangely, to the action button. (You can also pop up and edit contact info via the contact button, topmost right.)

However, it does mean users with more than one iOS device registered on the same iMessages Apple ID, they can start a conversation on their iPhone while out and about and continue it on their iPad when home on the couch.

In a nice touch, you can now swipe down to dismiss the keyboard and read your messages full screen.

iphone_30_icon_calendarWith iOS 5, the Calendar app gets a couple of new features that users have asking for for a while now, including new views, more consistent iOS-style navigation, and more direct touch-based interactions.

First, when in list, day, or month view on iPhone or iPod touch, turning to landscape orientation now gives you a week view.

On iPad, you now get a full Year view, complete with a color-coded heat map showing how busy your days are, from empty white days to blisteringly busy red days at opposite ends of the spectrum.

You can now also create a new event simply by touching and holding your finger down on the time (day view), or day (month view), or day and time (week view) you want to create it for, or in the all-day area (day or week view) for an all-day event. You can also touch and hold existing events to “float” them and drag them to new time time periods, or resize change (change start or end time to lengthen or shorten) using handles that appear at the top right and bottom left. The + button and edit buttons are still there and you can still use them, and you still have to fill out or change all the other information, but intuitively it’s always felt like something we should have been able to done so it’s nice to finally be able to do it.

Speaking of which, you can now swipe forward or backward to the next or previous day as well. Score one for perceived consistency.

iCloud also offers the ability to share calendars with family, friends, and associates.

iphone_30_icon_photos

While not specifically called out as part of Apple’s iOS 5 “cutting the (iTunes) cord” initiative, the ability to create and manage photo albums directly on-device for iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch helps achieve just that. No longer are you stuck with what you sync over via USB.

Now, by tapping the edit and then album buttons, you can add a new album. By multi-selecting photos and tapping Add To, you can move them between albums and from Camera Roll and Photo Stream (for iCloud) to albums.

Only Photo Stream pictures appear to be synced stored and pushed to all your devices, however, not the folder structure. That’s a little disappointing. It would be great if whatever folder system you set up on your iPhone — family, friends, dogs, hawaii trip, etc. — would automagically be replicated on your iPad or iPod touch, but… baby steps.

Apple has also moved the powerful CoreImage framework from OS X to their mobile operating system, allowing the Photos app for iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad to do some basic image editing work. Now, by tapping on the edit button at the top right, you get access to several iPhoto-like tools:

As is the case with most built-in functions, it provides the basic set of tools but is by no means a feature complete photo editing app. Still, it’s free, its bundled, and very many it will be good enough.

MMS has been replaced with Messages, and gone is MobileMe Gallery, but new to iOS 5 is the ability to tweet a picture (not video) to Twitter.

Photo Stream is part of iCloud and keeps the most recent photos from your Camera Roll, up to 1000 of them and for up to 1 month, in a special album that’s stored up to Apple’s servers and pushed down to your other iOS 5 devices. It can also stream photos to an Apple TV 2 without keeping any local copies, and will store all your photos, without limit of number and time, in iPhoto or Aperture on Mac, and on a Windows PC.

Think of it as a photo only (no video) duplicate of all the Camera Rolls of all your iOS devices — including photos you’ve saved to the Camera Roll from email and the web — all in one place.

Unlike Camera Roll, however, you can’t delete photos from Photo Stream. That means if you take any risqué photos, or save anything risqué from email or the web, that’s it. It’s in your photo stream until 1000 other photos force it off, a month passes, or you disable photo stream.

iphone_30_icon_cameraCamera’s updates don’t just include the ones it inherits from Photos by way of Camera Roll integration — it gets a lot of very convenient feature additions all its own.

First from the live Camera preview screen, you can now not only get to the Camera Roll and review your photos and videos by tapping the thumbnail button on the bottom right, but by swiping back as well. (No, you can’t get to the live Camera preview screen by swiping forward from Camera Roll in the Photos app.) You can either swipe back to the live Camera preview or tap the redesigned, and much brighter blue Camera button.

Double clicking the Home button from the Lock Screen doesn’t just bring up audio controls any more — it also brings up a Camera button. Tap the Camera button and you’re rocketed straight to the camera app, Passcode Lock or no Passcode Lock. (Though if you click the Home button from there, you’re intercepted by the Passcode lock.)

HDR (high dynamic Range) has been moved into an Options button that takes it’s place top center on the screen. When HDR is on, you now get a small text label above the Camera icon informing you it’s on. That’s a nice touch since HDR photos take a much longer amount of time to save and can lead to cursing if you’re in a rush and take one accidentally.

Also under Options you now have the ability to turn on a 3×3 Grid overlay to help compose your shots.

The Zoom Slider isn’t immediately apparent any more but you can now spread and pinch your fingers to zoom in and out, just as you do photos in the Photos app, and once you start zooming the old slider reappears.

Taking pictures and starting/stopping video recording has also become a lot easier in iOS 5, as you can now use the volume up button as a hardware shutter/recording button. If you plug in headphones, you can even use the volume up button on the headphones as a remote shutter/recording button.

While you could previously tap the screen to set auto focus and auto exposure, you can now tap and hold to lock both focus and exposure. Small text reading AE/AF Lock with appear above the Camera icon when enabled, and you can then move the shot around without it recalibrating. Tap the screen again to unlock.

iPhone 4S also gets both face recognition to improve focus and exposure for portrait shots, as well as video stabilization to help alleviate excessive shaking in your monstrous 1080p recordings.

The great sundering of the iPhone’s traditional iPod app begins with Videos. That’s right, while iPod touch and iPad have always had a separate Videos app, iOS 5 marks the first time iPhone has seen the same split between audio and visual content.

On iPad 2 and iPhone 4S, thanks to the powerful A5 processor, Apple has also enabled 1080p playback. (Though give the 1024×768 iPad 2 screen resolution, and the 960×640 iPhone 4S resolution, it’s a bit of a waste — though an eventual Retina display iPad at 2048×1536 or an Apple TV that could AirPlay 1080p could one day make it worthwhile.)

YouTube gets little by way of updates this time around, but if you’re a frequent Twitter user you’ll be glad to know integration into iOS 5 means you can now tweet out links to your favorite videos.

Stocks now get “real-time” updates. Also, the Stocks you add in the app are also the Stocks that appear in the new Notification Center Stock widget. Add or remove a stock here and it will be added to or removed from a widget.

iphone_30_icon_mapsWhile Apple has purchased map-related companies like Placebase and Poly9, there’s no obvious indication they’ve deployed them in Maps to anywhere near the extent they’ve deployed Siri. What they have done is continue to use the Google Maps backend and improve existing features and make them even more useful.

Maps can not only give you directions now, but they can provide you with alternate routes to your destination. The default route will be labeled Route 1 and highlighted, but if traffic or personal preferences make it less than desirable, you can tap an alternate route, for example Route 2, it will become highlighted, and the directions will switch to that route.

The Page Curl button now reveals the additional option to AirPrint your current map.

For starters, Weather now hooks into the Notification Center widget system. Whichever place is your default in the Weather app is the one that will be shown in the weather widget. So, change the default location in the Weather app and you change the widget.

Rather than choosing your home town as the default location for Weather, and manually changing it if and when you travel, you can simply enable Location Services in Weather and your iPhone or iPod will detect and display the weather for where you are at any given time.

Note: I live in Montreal, but Local Weather keeps putting me in Ottawa. So, work on the trust but verify principle — you may need to manually adjust if it Location Services gets it not quite right.

If daily forecasts weren’t enough for you, if just know it would rain or snow but not when wasn’t enough for you, iOS 5 weather adds hourly forecasts for the current day. Just swipe down and the rest of the week will fall away and hour-by-hour predictions will be revealed in their place.

Reminders is the Apple task and todo app 5 years in the making. As with most built-in apps, the functionality is bare-bones — it won’t be replacing high end task managers any time soon — but well executed. Interestingly, you need to have either iCloud and/or Exchange sync setup to use Reminders (or it sort of curls up and won’t do anything.) Once you’ve enabled sync in Settings, iCloud will create a Reminders list and Exchange will create a Task list and you’re in business.

The default view is your default list and you can swipe forward to see other lists, or back to get to the special Completed list. To mark a Reminder as completed, tap the box immediately to its left and a check will appear. To unmark it, quickly tap the box again. Completed Reminders will disappear from the regular lists and move to the Completed List. To move it back, tap the box to uncheck it.

Tap the Date button and you’re taken to a Day view where you can view all your reminders for that date. You can swipe backwards and forwards to the previous or next day or use the iPad-style thumbnail scroller at the bottom of the page. Tap the Today button at the top right to return to — you guessed it — today. If you’d rather see a month at a time, tap the Month button at the top left. Days with Reminders are colored red. Instead of swiping horizontally between months, you can scroll vertically.

To create a new Reminder, either tap the + button on the right, or tap the next empty spot on the lined paper in List or Date view. Type a name for the reminder to create it. Unlike Calendar, which immediately pops up a page for you to enter additional information, you need to tap Done at the top right, wait for the Reminder to be created, then tap it to get to the Details page.

From the Details page you can edit the name of the Reminder, and set the Remind Me method. It defaults to the current day and time, but you can set the On Day to any future date (or turn it off), and you can also set At Location to create a geo-fence around a specified location that can be told to alert either When I Leave or When I arrive. You can either choose your Current Location, your default Work or Home locations, or Choose Address from your Contacts. (Unfortunately, you can’t use an embedded Map to search for an address — you have to have it in your Contacts first.)

A Reminder can have either a time or a location assigned to it, or both. Reminders will alert you when the time arrives or the location is triggered, whichever comes first. So you could use it to remind you to call home at 5pm, and/or to call home when you leave your office.

Note: only iCloud associated Lists can use location reminders. Exchange associated Tasks don’t have that functionality.

You can also set the Repeat frequency, if applicable, and by tapping Show More, you can change the Priority, change the List the Reminder is filed under, and add any Notes you might need. To delete a Reminder, tap the Delete button at the bottom.

If you want to create new lists to help keep things organized (like a packing list, shopping list, project list, etc.) just tap the Lists button at the top left, then edit at the top right, the Create New List… beneath the account you want to add it too (if you have both iCloud and Exchange sync setup.)

You can also delete lists from this page by tapping the red circle icon, then the red delete button. You can re-order lists by grabbing the gripper icon to their right and dragging up or down. You can also search for reminders in any list here, which is good functionality but it feels like a strange place to put it. Creating a unified master page that collects all your reminders from all your lists, and allows search, feels like it would be a more useful and consistent way of handling it.


Now you can pause the countdown timer.

Game Center, Apple’s answer to Xbox Live!, gets updates this time around where Ping, Apple’s social music network, does not. Like several other iOS 5 updates, they round out the feature set and better integrate the app with Apple’s store system.

First up, you can now choose to keep your profile private, in which case your real name won’t be shared with Game Center friends. You can also add a picture or avatar to your profile, so you’re visually recognizable.

You get to see other people’s profile pics on the Friends page, along with a fanned out deck of friend recommendations, and the ability to sort friends by their achievement point total.

Games are likewise recommended, and you can buy them right inside Game Center via an embedded version of the App Store. It included no non-game apps, and no search, so it’s limited but still convenient.

Which begs the question — will Apple continue this type of integration, similar to what they do in iBooks, and instead of a button in Music to take you to the iTunes Store, just embed the audio portion of the store in Music?

Newsstand is new to iOS 5 but isn’t a new app per se. It’s more like a permanent Folder than contains all your subscription magazine and newspaper apps. Tap the Newsstand icon and, just like for Folders, Newsstand opens up to reveal the apps inside. Instead of a dark linen background, however, you’re greeted with iBooks-like wooden shelves. And instead of the usual app icon, you’re shown the cover art or front page of the latest issue. Tapping a Newsstand magazine or newspaper app launches it the same as tapping any iPhone, iPod touch, or iPad app.

A Store button at the top right takes you to a special section of the App Store where you can subscribe to your favorite magazines and newspapers, from Elle to The Economist, the New Yorker to the New York Times, Cosmo to Car and Driver.

Note: Individual apps have to be updated to support Newsstand. If they haven’t been updated yet, they’ll download to your Home Screen as they did before Newsstand. Sadly, the Newsstand Store doesn’t indicate which apps have or haven’t updated up front, you need to tap through an examine the release notes for each one.

iTunes Store has been integrated with iCloud to provide functionality that was previously exclusive to apps and games in the App Store. However, most of this new functionality is currently only available in the US — Apple is at the mercy of the record labels and Hollywood studios — but will hopefully expand in the future.

iTunes — in the US — now offers the ability to re-download previously purchased iTunes music and TV shows without being charged again for the privilege. This isn’t exclusive to iOS 5 mind you. As of a few months ago, re-downloads have been available in iOS 4.3 as well. (iTunes is a native wrapper around web views, so Apple can update it outside of the firmware.) However, this is as good a place as any to go over it.

Just tap the Purchased tab on the bottom of the screen and then choose which type of media you want to re-download. You can either view All your previous purchases or just the ones Not On This iPhone/iPod/iPad. You’ll be given an alphabetical list of songs, topped by options for All Songs and Recent Purchases. All Songs can be further filtered by Most Recent, Song Name, and Artist Name. Tap the iCloud Download icon to start re-downloading.

Tapping the More tab and then Downloads will let you keep track of what’s being pulled from iCloud, and tapping the Purchased button at the top right will send you to the Music or Videos app where you can also track the downloads and start listening/watching.

Note: To prevent piracy, you can’t simply log into one iTunes account after another and re-download all the music from each account. Once your iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch is associated with an iTunes account, it can’t be changed for 90 days.

iTunes Match is a supplementary iCloud service available for $25 a year. It’s a music locker service that scans your desktop iTunes library and, if they’re part of the 20 million strong iTunes catalog, immediately makes any songs you already have in your possession available to you in 256-bit AAC format. If they’re not in the iTunes catalog — if they’re your favorite fringe Anime soundtracks, for example — they’ll be uploaded to Apple’s servers in the existing format and quality.

Note: iTunes Match is currently in beta and listed as “coming soon”.

Apple introduced the iTunes Ringtone store way back in 2008 alongside the first iPod touch. With iOS 5 Tones are no long restricted to phone calls and can be purchased in iTunes and assigned in the Settings app to a wide range of alerts, including Messages, Emails, etc. Same store, same prices, more places to use them.

iphone_30_icon_appstoreApp Store also gets integrated with iCloud, though in this case it’s mostly new management, same great service. Like iTunes, the updates here aren’t unique to iOS 5 — Apple has rolled them out to iOS 4.3 users already — but for convenience’s sake, here’s where we’re going to cover them.

You could always re-download previously purchased apps at no additional charge from the App Store, but now Apple has created a better, clearer interface for doing it. Just tap on the Updates tab and you’ll see a top-of-page option for Purchased apps. Tap it and you’ll get a list of All your previously purchased apps in reverse chronological order. You can also tap the Not On This iPhone/iPad/iPod button to filter out app you already have installed. Tap the iCloud Download icon to start installing them.

Note: If you share an iTunes account with your significant other or kids, iTunes will now rat out any risqué purchases you might have previously been able to keep hidden…

App Store porn

In the other App Store sections, there’s no more guessing as to whether or not you’ve already purchased an app. If you have, the price tag button is replaced with an Install button.

iPad App Store search updated to include filters, more

iphone_30_icon_settingsAs is almost always the case, the greatest number of changes in iOS 5 appear in the Settings app — it’s where all the options for all the new system features, apps, and app features are to be found. Also, for the first time Settings gets notifications of its own. Any time a Software Update is pending, Settings will send you a popup and place a badge on its app icon.

Notifications now houses all the options for Lock Screen Info, Notification Center, and in-app Notifications. Up top you can choose to Sort Apps Manually or By Time. Below that are two lists, In Notification Center for apps that are currently enabled to send you notifications, and Not in Notification Center for apps you’ve disabled.

The Edit button gives you little gripper icons on the right hand side to let you re-order apps within either list.

Tap an app and you’re taken to the individual Notification settings. For each app, you can toggle Notification Center on or off, choose to Show 1, 5, or 10 recent items, pick an alert style from None to Banners (new style) to Alerts (old style popups), and decide if you want to Badge the App Icon (the little red numbers on the top right), allow sounds (including vibration). You can also choose if you want to be able to see the alert in View in Lock Screen.

Note: Not all apps provide for the same options. For example, some apps have no sound alerts, so there’s no option to enable or disable them.

Apple continues their emphasis on privacy by making Location Services far more granular. Not only can you globally disable them during initial setup, and toggle them all on or off in Settings, you can enable or disable each app on an individual basis, whether they’re built-in like Camera or Maps or App Store like Facebook or TomTom. You can also tap through to System Services and enable or disable Cell Network Search, Compass Collaboration, Diagnostics & Usage, Location-Based iAds, Setting Time Zone, and Traffic.

Moreover a purple arrow icon to the left of the on/off toggle tells you if any app or service is currently using location, and a gray arrow icon tells you if any app or service has used your location within the last 24hrs.

Sounds also get far more granular, and more encompassing controls. In addition to Ringtones (iPhone only) and Text Tones (new to iPod touch and iPad), you can set tone for New Voicemail, New Mail, Sent Mail, Tweet, Calendar Alerts, and Reminder Alerts.

If you want to change one, tap it. At the very top of the tone page you have a handy button to take you right to the iTunes Tone Store (not just for Ringtones any more). You can then choose from None (no sound), or from a list of Alerts (previously Text Tones) and Ringtones.

Alerts now includes a Tweet Tone for the new Twitter integration. And yes, most Alerts are still inappropriate for the job for which they were intended — let’s hope they get shorter and snappier in the future.

While it may seem like a bit of an overlap to have alert sound on/off settings under Notifications and a None option in Sounds, it does increase discoverability for users.

Also, as part of Apple’s outstanding Accessibility features, you can now set Vibration Patterns in addition to the standard Alert, including Heartbeat, Rapid, S.O.S., and Sympathy, and you can even create a Custom Vibration via the Create New Vibration tab.

Just tap the screen to create a pattern, stop it and play it back to make sure it’s too your liking, and then hit Save. This way, if you can’t hear individualized alerts, you can feel them.

In the About section, there’s now a field for your iPhone, iPod touch, or iPad Name. Tap it and you can change it on-device.

Since iOS 5 has take iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad PC Free, instead of updating your firmware by connecting to iTunes on Mac or Windows, you can just tap Software Update and it will do it on-device. If there isn’t an update ready and waiting for you, Settings will check for it. When an update is available, tap Install and it will begin to download. Settings will restart your device and apply the update.

iOS 5 beta 4 is an OTA update... if you can connectDaily Tip: How to do an iOS OTA update [developers]

Usage gets a big makeover, and far more granular and interactive controls. First, Storage is broken down on an app by app basis. You can see how much memory each app is using, and if you tap through, you can see what it’s using it for, and even delete it if it’s an App Store app. (If you don’t see all your apps, just tap Show all Apps.)

iCloud shows off it’s stats here to, and lets you tap through, you can Manage Storage just like you can from the top level iCloud Settings area proper (see below).

Cellular Data now requires you tap through to see Call Time, Cellular Network Data, and Tether Data (if your plan allows tethering.)

Once you’ve enabled iTunes Wi-Fi Sync, here’s where you can check and see your last sync day and time, and manually tell your iPhone, iPod touch, or iPad to Sync Now.

You can now enable or disable Spotlight Search for Reminders.

Here’s where Apple hides all the really impressive Accessibility features. Along with previous options, you can now toggle on Hearing Aid mode, turn on or off Custom Vibrations, have the LED flash go off to signal notification alerts, set Mono Audio left or right, set Assistive Touch, and set Triple-click Home.

If you tap through to Assistive Touch, you can toggle it on or off, toggle Always Show Menu on or off, set the tracking speed, tap through to Create New Gestuers, or delete Custom Gestures via the Edit button at the top right.

Triple-click Home can now be set to toggle AssistiveTouch.

iCloud shows you your current Account and lets you tap through to see the associated Apple ID, your current Storage Plan, and your Payment Information. You can buy more Storage right from this page if you want to.

Mail, Contacts, Calendars, Reminders, Bookmarks, Notes, and Find my iPhone can be toggle on or off, as can Photo Stream but oddly you need to tap through to a separate page to do this. (Perhaps more options are coming in the future?) You also have to tap through to a separate page to toggle Documents & Data, but have the additional option to toggle Use Cellular on or off as well. (If you turn it off, you can save on data but will need to be on Wi-Fi to store/push your documents.)

Storage & Backup shows how much total storage you have available (every iCloud user starts off with 5GB for free), and how much you have available out of that total. You can Manage Storage, Buy More Storage (using your iTunes account), toggle iCloud backup on and off, and even start a Back Up Now (if you’re on Wi-Fi).

Tap through to Manage Storage and you get a list of all your currently backed up iOS devices, along with the size of their individual backups. (You can Buy More Storage here as well). Tap a device name and you’re taken to its info page which shows the device name, device type, the time of the Latest Backup, the Backup Size, and the Backup Options.

Backup Options predict the Next Backup Size and then lets you see the current size of each individual app’s backup and toggle its backup state on or off. (If you don’t see all your apps listed, tap the Show All Apps tab at the bottom.) You can also tap the big red Delete Backup button to remove that device’s backup from iCloud.

All your accounts are listed here and tapping on one lets you toggle individual aspects on or off and set additional options.

If you have an iCloud account, tapping it here gives you the same options as tapping iCloud in its own settings tap. Again, more places means more discoverability.

If you tap into another account, like MobileMe or Exchange, and keep tapping into Advanced settings as deeply as you can, you’ll find and be able to toggle on S/MIME support, turn Sign and/or Encrypt on, and pick a Certificate.

There have been a bunch of other small changes as well. For example, showing 25 mail messages is now gone and 1000 has been added.

Settings for Twitter include a handy button to grab the official Twitter app from the App Store, if it’s not already installed. You can tap Add Account to get started, and you can add multiple accounts without a problem. You can even Create New Account if you don’t have one (or enough) already.

For each account you can individually enable or disable Find Me by Email and Tweet Location. And you can use Twitter to update the info in your Contacts.

FaceTime was originally introduced in iOS 4 for iPhone using phone numbers as unique identifies. Later iPod touch and then iPad got FaceTime using Apple IDs as the identifier. Now in iOS 5, things go full circle and iPhone can use both phone numbers and Apple IDs for FaceTime.

You can now choose to have Safari open links In New Page (iPhone and iPod touch) or In New Tap (iPad), or In Background so you can stay on the same page/tab and go look at the new one only when you’re ready. On iPhone and iPod touch you have to tap through and check your preference. On iPad, just a toggle.

Desktop Safari stalwart Private Browsing makes the jump to mobile as well. When you toggle it on or off, you’ll be asked if you want to close all existing pages or tabs or leave them open. Since the point of Private Browsing is to turn off all cookies, caching, and tracking information so you can surf discreetly, closing existing pages and tabs is probably a good idea.

If you tap through the Advanced Tab, and into Website Data, you now get a list of websites that use HTML5 local storage to keep information stored on your iPhone, iPod touch, or iPad (for example, Gmail.com so you can still access some recent mail when off of the network.) Not only can you see which sites have data on your device here, you can tap Edit to delete that data on a site-by-site basis or scroll to the bottom and tap Remove All Website Data to nuke every bit of it all at once whenever the mood strikes you.

With the addition of iMessage, the Message Settings now let you toggle the service on or off, and present the option to Send Read Receipts, so like BlackBerry Messenger (BBM) you can let people know not only that you’ve received their iMessage, but seen it as well.

On the iPhone, because it also ties into your carrier’s SMS/MMS service, you can choose to enable or disable Send as SMS for when iMessage is unavailable (say one of your writers has taken up with an Android phone for a week…) If you have both a decent text and data plan, leaving this on ensures smooth, uninterrupted messaging. If you’ve greatly reduced texts in lieu of iMessage, leaving this off means you don’t risk hefty a la carte SMS charges.

You can also choose which Apple ID email address you want to use for iMessage (much like you can for FaceTime), and add additional email addresses if, for example, you want friends and family to reach you through a different channel than colleagues at work. (Or if you’ve just collected too many Apple IDs, lost track of who has which one, and don’t want to miss anyone who might iMessage you on a whim.)

In Photos Settings, like in iCloud Settings, you can toggle Photo Stream on or off.

If iTunes in the Cloud is available in your local iTunes Store, you can not only re-download Music and iBooks just like Apps, but you can now set your iPhone, iPod touch, or iPad to automatically download any Music and iBooks, and Apps that you’ve downloaded on any other device or on iTunes desktop on your Mac or Windows PC. For example, if you buy All Along the Watchtower on your Mac, it’ll start downloading to your desktop library but also start downloading on your iPhone and iPad. The same holds true for apps provided they’re universal. So, if you buy Angry Birds HD on your iPad, it’ll download to your desktop iTunes library, but not your iPhone (because you can’t play iPad games on your iPhone). Likewise, buying an iOS version of an app or game doesn’t cause your Mac to start downloading the Mac App Store version.

If you have several family members with widely different tastes all on the same iTunes account, auto downloading can get messy. If you’re the only person on the account but you have a bunch of iTunes enabled computers and iOS devices, it can be miraculous.

On iPhone and iPad 3G, you can also choose to enable Use Cellular Data to automatically download purchases when away from Wi-Fi. If you have limited data, keep this off.

Phone has a number of new options in Settings, but in the app itself the major new feature is granular deletion of Recent Calls. You now get an Edit button at the top right and tapping it lets you go through and select and confirm individual calls for deletion.

iphone_30_icon_emailMail gets a bevy of new features in iOS 5 that bring it closer on par to a full desktop email client without losing the ease of use that characterizes Apple’s multitouch apps. Everything, from formatting to function gets an update, and the built in dictionary comes along for the ride.

Have an email address in the To: field and think it really would be better off in the CC: field? Gone are the days of moving by way of deleting and retyping. Now just touch the address, it floats up, and you can drag it to just exactly where you want it.

Touch and hold to select as you would for copy and paste, and the popup menu now let’s you tap an arrow to get to formatting commands. Bold, italic, and underline are all options, along with decreasing or increasing the quote level.

You can now Flag or Unflag messages to make important email stand out. It’s been included alongside Mark as Read or Unread.

Speaking of Marking, you can now Mark multiple messages as Read or Unread using the same Edit controls that previously allowed you to Move or Delete them.

If you try to send an email and the Subject is left blank, iOS 5 will popup a warning.

You can now add mailbox folders directly on your iPhone, iPod touch, or iPad. Just go to the account you want to add a mailbox folder to, tap Edit up top, then New Mailbox at the bottom, and enter the name you want to use. If you want to make it a subfolder, just tap the account name and you’ll get a list of parent folders.

You can also tap the Edit button, choose a folder, and then change the name, change the parent folder, or even tap the Delete button to remove it from existence.

iphone_30_icon_safariSeveral of Safari’s new features seem designed to allow users to consumer web articles faster, easier, and more elegantly than was previous possible on mobile devices. But at the same time, Safari for iPad behaves more than ever like a desktop browser.

Safari Reader uses, in part, the open source version of Readability to re-render web articles text on a white background with big, legible text, and free from ads and other distractions that typically clutter up the ‘net. Just tap the Reader button at the top right of the address bar and Reader will slide in and take right over. To make it go away, tap the (now purple) Reader button again.

For hard-to-read sites, or those that have double-underline popup punch-the-monkeyed their souls to the monetization devils, Reader comes in really handy.

Reading List is a special type of bookmark that lets you quickly save a web article to read later. The combination of being easy to add and easy to find, and iCloud-powered sync across iOS and Mac OS X Safari browsers, makes it useful as far as it goes.

To save a page, tap the Action button and then tap Add to Reading List. To retrieve a page, tap the Bookmarks button and from the top level, tap the Eyeglasses icon or the Reading List label at the top.

But even taken together, while nice to have as built in features, they’re not a serious replacement for Instapaper.

The less than ideal pop-over previously used to show the Mail list in iPad has been replaced with a slide-on, slide-off panel. It looks better but is a little harder to put away at time.

The Nitro JavaScript engine, brought to Safari in iOS 4.3, has also been pushed out to UIWebView, the control used to display a web page inside an app, and for web apps bookmarked to the Home Screen. That means all web pages now enjoy the 2x software speed boost Nitro previously only provided Safari, and Apple continues to provide the most powerful HTML 5 support in mobile.

While iPhone and iPod touch retains their customary Pages system to manage moving between multiple active web pages, iPad gets the full desktop treatment courtesy of tabs. And they work just as you would expect. Tap the big + button on the right to add a new tab and the tiny X icon on the tabs far left edge to close it.

Also like desktop Safari, touching and holding the Forward or Back button will now open a History popover.

While iPod touch always had a separate Music app, iPad had a separate music app named iPod, and iPhone combined both video and music into a single iPod app. No longer. Whether Apple is winding down iPod as a brand — they didn’t update any of the iPod line of devices this year — or simply creating consistency across iOS devices, the iPod app is dead. Long live the Music app.

Music gets a face lift in general, with a new look to most of its views. The most impressive of which is the inclusion the download indicators for songs either freshly purchased or in the process of re-downloading thanks to iTunes in the Cloud. There’s also a new Store button at the top right so you can quickly get to the iTunes Store to buy or download more content.

In previous versions of iOS, long names were cut off. That meant, for example, if you wanted to find one of a dozen or more chapters in an audio book, it was a guessing game. (Tap. No, not 9-16. Tap. No, not 20-22. Where’s 25, frakdammit!) Now you just tap and hold and the full information pops up, making it easy to pick the right one. It works for most fields, track name, artist name, album name, etc. Again, a small addition but a helpful one.

iOS 5 features: Info popups in Music

Contacts gets a relatively minor addition in iOS 5 — pun intended. You can now add a new field called Related People, and set it to mother, father, parent, brother, sister, child, friend, spouse, partner, assistant, manager, or other. You can then type in a name or choose from an another existing Contact.

iOS 5 will be available as a free update for all supported devices on Wednesday, October 12, 2011. Although not all features are supported on all devices — or all generations of all devices — iOS 5 can be installed on the following:

Yes, absolutely and immediately with 2 caveats. First, if you’re on older hardware like iPhone 3GS and you’re reading this just as iOS 5 becomes available, you might want to wait a few days and make sure there aren’t any reports of excessive sluggishness or other issues. Second, if you’re Jailbroken and rely on certain features, and don’t like tethered Jailbreaks, you might want to wait until a nicely packaged iOS 5 Jailbreak for your device is released (iPad 2 and iPhone 4S might take a while.)

Otherwise this is a fantastic update with incredible new functionality — and it’s free. What are you waiting for? It will make you feel like you have a while new device.

Almost everything about iOS 5 feels broader and better, and not only more functional, but more personal and more tactile as well. Apple has added more granular levels of control to things like Location Services and Data Storage, so you can keep private what you want to keep private and delete what you want to delete. They’ve also added more direct touch manipulation to apps like Multitasking Gestures on iPad and touch-and-drag on Calendar and Mail, so the interactions are viscerally intuitive. At the same time they’ve the social, sharing aspects of iOS with services like AirPlay and apps like Find My Friends. It’s a clever balance. So is the interface, which Apple has kept as accessible for novice users as it was in iOS 1 in 2007, and yet added ever greater layers of complexity for power users, including Fast App Switcher in 2010 and Notifications in 2011. For my sister, an iPhone or iPad can just make calls, play music, watch videos, and take photos. For me they can increasingly do almost anything.

And then there’s Siri. I’ve already written about what it might [mean for Apple in the customer insight space](Apple, Siri and the customer insight play). What it means for users is perhaps even more profound. It’s a whole new interface for computing and the next step in Apple’s relentless attempt to make technology ever more mainstream. From CLI on Apple II to GUI on Mac to multitouch on iPhone to Siri on iPhone 4S, Apple continues to tear down barriers of entry and reset expectations not about what we can do with devices, but about what they can do for us.

There are still things to complain about if you come from other platforms and miss specific features or have specific needs. Faster access to radio toggles. Quick message previews and responses. A Theme Store in case the 5-year old UI is starting to look a little less than fresh. A Files app that handles documents the way Photos handles images and videos. But with each version the list in undeniably growing shorter.

Still, it’s hard not to think about Steve Jobs at this point, and his standing beneath that giant slide showing the crossroads of technology and liberal arts, and see iOS 5 in the context of that vision. The man who was inspired by calligraphy to make elegant digital typography and lick-able interfaces has begun to obsolete them with voice. But that was his way and it remains Apple’s way. Future thinking and fearlessly so.

Some rough edges remain, and there will be an iOS 5.1 and iOS 6 after it, but iOS 5 is still beautiful and we can use it to make our devices and our lives better.

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